Forget John Travolta and Uma Thurman grooving to Chuck Berry in Jack Rabbit Slims or Michael Madsen’s slice-n-shuffle to Stealers Wheel’s laidback ’70s classic – for our money this is the greatest music moment in Quentin Tarantino’s entire filmography. Co-written by record producer Thom Bell and Delfonics lead singer William Hart and originally performed by the band in 1969, the Grammy-winning Philly soul ballad Didn’t I (Blow Your Mind This Time) plays a key role in developing the relationship between two of the film’s main characters. The song expresses what Robert Forster’s bail bondsman Max Cherry can’t: a deep, yearning desire, in this case for Pam Grier’s titular heroine. Given that Tarantino is an avid vinyl collector, the scene where Jackie introduces Max to the Delfonics’ self-titled LP at her home can also be read as a personal ode to physical music.